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Thesis Info
- LABS ID
- 00746
- Thesis Title
- _derivations and the Performer-Developer: Co-Evolving Digital Artefacts and Human-Machine Performance Practices
- Author
- Benjamin Carey
- E-mail
- benjamin.carey AT sydney.edu.au
- 2nd Author
- 3rd Author
- Degree
- PhD
- Year
- 2016
- Number of Pages
- University
- University of Technology, Sydney
- Thesis Supervisor
- Associate Professor Andrew Johnston
- Supervisor e-mail
- Andrew.Johnston AT uts.edu.au
- Other Supervisor(s)
- Dr Jon Drummond
- Language(s) of Thesis
- English
- Department / Discipline
- Music Technology
- Copyright Ownership
- Published in University Thesis Repository
- Languages Familiar to Author
- English, French
- URL where full thesis can be found
- opus.lib.uts.edu.au/handle/10453/43452
- Keywords
- Interactive Music, Improvisation, Creative Coding, Reflective Practice, Computer Music, New Interfaces for Musical Expression, Electronic Music, Live Algorithms, Music, Music Composition, Music Performance, Music Technology, Musical Metacreation, Computat
- Abstract: 200-500 words
- This thesis concerns the development and use of interactive performance systems designed for improvised musical performance. Written from the perspective of a
performer-developer, the research traces the development of personal approaches to
designing for musical interactivity in human-machine performance, culminating in the development of the _derivations interactive performance system and related creative outcomes.
The contributions and outcomes of this research project are as follows:
- The development of novel computer music techniques for use in interactive
musical performance;
- A novel self-reflective study of the development and use of interactive musical
performance systems from the perspective of a performer-developer;
- Theoretical perspectives on the design and use of interactive musical
performance systems.
In addition to the published thesis, this research has generated significant creative
outcomes in the form of software, studio recordings, documentation of live
performances, video documentation and a publicly available website dedicated to the
_derivations system. These creative outcomes are also presented as significant
contributions of this research.
The creative practice underpinning this research is presented as a narrative of
development, tracing advancements in the author’s practice towards the stabilisation of the _derivations system and its accompanying performance practice. Designed for use by instrumental improvisers, _derivations uses live-sampling and timbral matching techniques to generate autonomous responses to the live performance of an improvising musician, engaging the performer in a playful, improvised musical dialogue. This thesis outlines both formative programming experiments and stabilised software artefacts, tracing the author’s creative practice to reveal the iterative and cyclical patterns of development engaged in throughout this research.
Employing a practice-based research approach, this project uses the creative practices of software programming and interactive musical performance to surface issues, concerns and interests concerning human-machine performance practice.
A self-reflective methodology is employed to engage with emergent research themes arising throughout the development of my creative artefacts. The thesis concludes with three extended reflections-on-action that interrogate theoretical concerns relevant to the interactive computer music community. The first of these reflections addresses the relationship between human and material agencies in the practice of the performer-developer, whilst the second reflection interrogates the concept of musical interpretation in the context of human-machine performance. The final reflection proposes symbiosis as a novel interactive metaphor in the development of interactive musical systems.